2022
DOI: 10.3390/rel13111030
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Religious and Economic Soft Power in Ghana-Turkey Relations

Abstract: Turkey’s government seeks to apply both “religious soft power” and “economic soft power” to increase its influence in Ghana. Turkey’s religious soft power relationship with Ghana is exemplified by Turkey’s paying for construction of a new national mosque in the African country, at a cost of USD 10 million. Turkey’s economic soft power relationship with Ghana is exemplified by both considerable recent investments and in fast-growing bilateral trade. The overall aim of the government of Turkey is to increase the… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Christianity and Islam both arrived in what is today Ghana in the 15th century and were influenced and shaped by local cultural values. Islam is said to have preceded Christianity in Ashanti, and when the latter faith arrived, the Asantehene, monarch of the historical Ashanti Empire and today ceremonial ruler of the Ashanti people, sought to accommodate both harmoniously (Haynes 2022c). More generally, there was a period of approximately four centuries during which older, indigenous Ghanaian society was refashioned.…”
Section: Christian-muslim Relationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Christianity and Islam both arrived in what is today Ghana in the 15th century and were influenced and shaped by local cultural values. Islam is said to have preceded Christianity in Ashanti, and when the latter faith arrived, the Asantehene, monarch of the historical Ashanti Empire and today ceremonial ruler of the Ashanti people, sought to accommodate both harmoniously (Haynes 2022c). More generally, there was a period of approximately four centuries during which older, indigenous Ghanaian society was refashioned.…”
Section: Christian-muslim Relationsmentioning
confidence: 99%